J.C.MacSwell Posted March 6, 2005 Share Posted March 6, 2005 Can comeone explain the difference between spin 1/2, spin 1 and spin 2 in such a way that the numbers make sense. I realize they mean quantum spin and relate to classic spin by analogy only but in what sense is spin 2 "twice" spin 1, or spin 1 "twice" spin 1/2. I realize also that spin 1 and 2 are in a different "family" than spin 1/2. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tom Mattson Posted March 6, 2005 Share Posted March 6, 2005 OK, first you need to know that when someone calls an electron a "spin-1/2 particle", they don't mean that its spin angular momentum has a magnitude of 1/2. What they mean is that the z-component of its spin angular momentum has a magntude of 1/2 times h-bar. Start with the spin angular momentum vector: [math] \mathbf {S}=S_x \mathbf {i}+S_y \mathbf {j} +S_z \mathbf{k} [/math] In QM, the components of angular momentum do not commute, which means that you cannot simultaneously measure all 3 components. You can, however, measure the magnitude of the angular momentum and a single component simultaneously. Let's call this single component "the z component". We have the following relations: [math] |\mathbf {S}|=\sqrt {s(s+1)}\hbar [/math] [math] S_z=m_s\hbar [/math] Here, ms is the spin quantum number and s is the number from which you calculate the norm of the spin vector (I don't know if it has a special name or not). The quantum number ms can take on any values in the set {-s, -s+1, -s+2,...,s-2,s-1,s}. The number s is what is referred to when people say "spin (insert number here)". So for instance a spin-1/2 particle has s=1/2, which means that the magnitude of its spin angular momentum vector is given by the following. [math] |\mathbf {S}|=\frac {\sqrt {3}}{2}\hbar [/math] Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
swansont Posted March 6, 2005 Share Posted March 6, 2005 Spin refers to the amount of intrinsic angular momentum, in terms of h-bar, a particle has. The amount refers to the vector projected along some axis (usually the z axis by convention). The angular momentum projection can only change by units of h-bar. This picture might help A particle that is spin 1/2 will have 1/2 h-bar of angular momentum projected along the z axis. That can be "up" or "down," i.e. +1/2 or -1/2 in terms of some defined axis. A spin 1 particle can have 1,0 or -1 units projected along the z axis. Two spin 1/2 particles may combine to give either a spin 0 particle (anti-aligned) or a spin 1 particle (aligned spins) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
J.C.MacSwell Posted March 7, 2005 Author Share Posted March 7, 2005 Thank-you both and that link looks interesting. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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